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tv   The Rachel Maddow Show  MSNBC  January 7, 2014 9:00pm-10:01pm PST

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from the left or right, that's what we need it for. jesse myerson. that's "all in." "the rachel maddow show" starts now. thanks to you at home for joining us this hour. from 1961 to 1963 the united states increased our number of nuclear weapons by 50%. a 50% increase in nuclear weapons in three years. by this time 50 years ago, by january of 1964, we had tens of thousands of nuclear bombs in our national stockpile. and we were building more at a faster rate than we had ever built them before. now, for all these nuclear bombs, we needed enriched uranium and produced our enriched uranium at defusion plants in places like paducah, kentucky, portage, ohio, and oak ridge, tennessee. we were working so hard to build nuclear bombs as fast as we could in 1964 that those plants
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where we made highly enriched uranium, those plants were consuming 6% of our nation's total electrical output in order to make uranium. wow. but, again, we already had tens of thousands of nuclear weapons stockpiled. how many were we ever planning on using? 50 years ago this week, 50 years ago tomorrow, the new president, the elected vice president who had been elevated to the highest office in the land by the assassination of president john f. kennedy just seven weeks earlier, lyndon b. johnson, 50 years ago this week, stood in front of a joint session of congress to deliver his state of the union message and he made huge news in that state of the union. he made huge news when he said he wanted to cut back on some of our massive, expensive uranium production. >> telling congress he will put
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the output of uranium by 25%. this is the first cutback since invention of the atomic bomb in 1945. he doesn't say specifically that this will cut down on weapons, but he applied it. >> that was part of the nbc news post state of the union roundup the night of the speech. the same kind of roundtable that we do now. that was 50 years ago this week when lbj gave his first state of the union as president and looking back at that contemporaneous coverage now, you would think that that state of the union address in 1964 would be remembered as the oh my god, he's slowing down our uranium production speech. i mean, that's pretty much how it was greeted at the time. a cut in uranium production? whoa! that was essentially the big news out of the state of the union at the time it was covered in 1964. and lbj did follow through on that promise. within three days, there were reports from across the country
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about hundreds of people being laid off at the reactors and the uranium production plants. the beltway press was also very excited at the time that president johnson was proposing an overall federal budget for the country that was smaller than what president kennedy had asked for. >> robert, in a manner of speaking, you were home on the range for about ten days down to johnson city, texas, shuttling back and forth between austin and the lbj ranch. how much of an indication did all of you get down there that the budget would be this much under $100 billion? >> well, frankly, it came as a surprise to me to find out that it would be less than the last fiscal year. >> this means that the johnson spending plan is $500 billion smaller than the latest estimate of spending under the kennedy budget. and this, i submit is quite a feat. republicans praise the president and like the budget cutting part, anyway. >> here we are at the 50-year anniversary of that state of the union. that cut uranium production and
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that very slightly shrunk the budget from the previous year. which, of course, nobody remembers that state of the union for now. that's exactly the way it was covered at the time that it happened. but now we look back on it and remember it for something very, very different. because the other thing that lyndon johnson announced in that state of the union, which the beltway press really did not care about at all at the time, the thing that he is remembered for that we are acknowledging the 50-year anniversary of this week, the big deal of that speech was this. >> this administration today, here and now, declares unconditional war on poverty in america. i urge this congress and all americans to join with me that effort. >> it's true that lyndon johnson did propose a slightly shrunken federal budget in his first year as president as well as laying those people off from the
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uranium plants. he did propose spending less overall than john f. kennedy ever had as president. but, you know, the smallness of the size of his budget proposal that year was not for a lack of ambition for what lbj wanted to do. that war on poverty that he declared 50 years ago tomorrow was not just a declared war, it was actually a fought war. as part of the ambitious activist government of lbj and the great society era. that congress that he addressed 50 years ago this week and the next congress, president johnson proposed more than 100 pieces of legislation to each of those congresses that were, in fact, accepted by the congress and enacted into law. things like, oh, hey, medicare and head start and the food stamp program in 1967. a big increase in social security benefits. coverage of nursing home care for elderly americans. community health centers, job
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training programs. that speech, the start of all of it was 50 years ago tomorrow. and so, tomorrow, in the lyndon b. johnson room at the u.s. capitol which is off the senate floor, on the 50th anniversary of the war on poverty speech, the junior start from florida, marco rubio, will go before the cameras in the lbj room on that anniversary so he can denounce lbj as a failure. and we know that's what marco rubio is planning on doing tomorrow because he previewed his address this weekend with a sleepy looking video i think was filmed in a broom closet somewhere near his office. >> hello, i'm u.s. senator marco rubio. 50 years ago president lyndon johnson declared a big government war on poverty. after 50 years, isn't it time to declare big government's war on poverty a failure? >> appropriate question to ask on the anniversary on the war on poverty speech 50 years later. every time we do get to a round numbered anniversary of that speech, conservatives insist on declaring a total failure in the war. they insist on declaring that waging war on poverty is a stupid idea because obviously
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there's still poverty and, therefore, everything done to fight it was a bad idea. and every year on round numbered anniversaries of that speech, defenders of lbj argue for the successes of the war on poverty. lbj's top aide on domestic affairs throughout his whole presidency and the period is joseph califano, the loudest cheerleader. for the success of the war on poverty and great society programs, arguing those programs ought to be recognized as having worked. "from 1963 until 1970 as the impact of his great society programs were felt, the portion of americans living below the poverty line dropped from 22.2% to 12.6%." the most dramatic decline over such a brief period in this century." and if you measure it that way, califano is right. that is a reduction in poverty in this country of 43% over 8 years. and it's not magic or hard to see how it works. when president johnson in the war on poverty made sure every old person in the country had health insurance with medicare
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and when he greatly increased the amount of money people got from social security. just the size of the check you received as a social security recipient. doing things like that, duh, had a huge impact on the number of elderly people in america who were poor. and it's not hard to see. right now if you look at the official poverty rate for old people in this country, just for the elderly, 44% of the elderly people in america would be considered poor, would be at or below the poverty line today. 44%. if you did not factor in their social security benefits. as it is, the elderly poverty rate in this country is only 9% because people do get social security. if you took away everybody's social security benefits, the elderly poverty rate would be 44%. this is not subtle stuff. this is not complicated math. social security, though, is kind of a singular example because
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social security is such a successful program and such a beloved and popular program that washington hasn't been able to mess with it too much since president johnson expanded it in the war on poverty. if you try to cut social securities you will get burned. just ask vice president paul ryan. but other war on poverty programs have not faired as well over the years as social security has. in the "daily beast" this week, what's wong with marco rubio's thinking when he declared the war on poverty a failure is, "we have not, of course, been fighting any kind of serious war on poverty for five decades. we fought it with truly adequate funding for about one decade. less even." then the backlash started. by 1981, ronald reagan's government was fighting a war on the war on poverty." he's right. mocking and deriding and campaigning against programs to
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fight poverty was a big part of how ronald reagan got elected. and it was central to the whole idea of his presidency. in terms of domestic policy. >> my friends, some years ago, the federal government declared war on poverty. and poverty won. >> poverty won. we lost. we should stop fighting. marco rubio surely wants to be seen as reagan-esque. right now he does have that same message. stop fighting. to get people out of poverty, any policy effort to do that is big government that's doomed to fail. still, though, senator rubio wants to run for president and as part of wanting to run for president, he's going to give a speech in the lbj room tomorrow, ostensibly about the issue of poverty and from his perspective, why the government can't help. but it is a speech on the subject of poverty. and a lot of republicans have been giving speeches and doing
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campaign-style events around the issue of poverty recently. which if you really care about income inequality and the problem of deep poverty in this country, it is kind of a heartening development to see even republicans talking about it. rand paul has been doing this sort of thing, too, giving speeches in detroit that, again, are mostly mocking and criticizing the idea that government can do anything about poverty. at least he is talking about poverty. senator mike lee has been talking about it. congressman eric cantor, paul ryan, senator mitch mcconnell. whether you credit the leadership of pope francis or not, the issue of poverty has suddenly become popular in american politics. and now comes the really interesting part which is figuring out whether it is all a bunch of talk or whether anything is actually going to happen. 50 years after the declared war on poverty in this nation, what is the status of that war? part of the reason this is
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turning out to be a really interesting question right now in washington is because nobody knows the answer. nobody knows if something is really going to happen. today in washington, there was the rarest of all washington things. today in washington, there was an actual surprise and it was on this issue. the u.s. senate today voted on extending unemployment insurance for people who have been unemployed for a long time. those benefits were cut off at christmastime. 1.3 million americans lost their unemployment benefits. if congress doesn't reverse that cutoff, something like 14 million americans are going to be affected by that this year. 1.3 million americans were just cut off. it's going to be 14 million americans who will with cut off this year because of that change. people who otherwise would have unemployment benefits but they're going to be cut off or already have been. last night on this show, we had the number three democrat in the senate, here on this show, sort of showing us the democrats' low expectations for this vote today.
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senator schumer was here on this program last night talking about how the democrats were planning to make the republicans keep voting on this issue over and over and over again once the republicans inevitably voted it down today. but, surprise, they didn't vote it down. legitimately, surprise. nobody expected this. even while the vote was still taking place today, nobody knew whether or not this thing was going to pass. the republicans were filibustering it. most of them said they were against it. but dean heller supported it. they needed four more. then there was kelly ayotte. then there was dan coats of indiana, susan collins of maine, lisa murkowski of alaska and rob portman of ohio. with senator portman's totally unexpected vote for unemployment insurance, that was enough to break the republican party's filibuster on the bill, so the unemployment extension looks like it is going to pass the senate. they got enough republican votes to break the filibuster and nobody saw that coming. nobody saw that coming. nobody saw that coming. marco rubio who's been talking about poverty and giving his big speech on it tomorrow, he voted no. rand paul, talking about poverty, voted no.
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mike lee voted no. mitch mcconnell who's been talking about poverty, of course, no, he voted no. enough other republicans voted yes that it happened and that legitimately was a surprise. and once it passes the senate, that will mean it goes to the republican-controlled house where it would be, again, a legitimate surprise if the republicans in the house even allowed a vote on it. but one surprise means maybe there can be another. you know, the problem created by this cutoff of benefits is a real problem. we just cut back to 26 weeks of unemployment benefits. you want to know the average time it takes an out of work person to find a new job right now? 35 weeks. we're cutting off unemployment when? the labor department says cutting off these benefits is going to cost the economy 240,000 jobs. jp morgan economists say it's going to cut the annual economic growth rate for the entire country by almost half a point in the first quarter. it's a real problem that they cut off these benefits. reinstating them is not a messaging bill.
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this is not a bumper sticker bill. this is not some fantasy program or fantasy repeal designed to placate an ideologically motivated constituency that mike huckabee is going to do infomercials about on fox news. this is an actual policy, a real thing affecting real people and affecting our economy in a real way. and it turns out the democrats are planning on keeping real pressure on it as the legislative future here seems more and more hard to predict. president obama in the east room of the white house today praised the senate for having moved unexpectedly toward reinstating those benefits. he pressured today the house to at least allow a vote on it. and the president introduced to the nation one of the real people, one of the real and frankly really sympathetic people who have been hurt by unemployment getting cut off. her name is katherine hackett from kentucky, unemployed, looking for work. she raised her two sons on her own and both of them right now are serving in the u.s. military. >> i have cut expenses everywhere possible. and i am not just sitting home enjoying the good life. my cuts include heating my house to 58 degrees, wearing a hat and a coat to stay warm because oil is expensive. i have lost weight because food
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is expensive. as a single mother, i worked many different jobs and never asked for a handout. while i raised two wonderful boys. both of my sons are serving in the u.s. military. >> when we've got the mom of two of our troops who is working hard out there but is having to wear a coat inside the house, we've got a problem. and it's one that can be fixed. >> joining us now is senator jeff merkley, democrat of oregon. senator merkley, thanks very much for being here tonight. i know that you were a yes vote on extending those unemployment benefits, so congratulations on that vote today.
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>> thank you very much, rachel. you're giving the senate republicans way too much credit because today they only voted in favor of having a debate on the issue. they did not vote in favor of closing debate on the bill, itself. in fact, we anticipate that based on mcconnell's proposal today, they're going to try to attach conditions that will make it extremely hard to pass unemployment, so we really need to rally people across america to have them weigh in with their senators not only should we debate the issue, we should actually restore the unemployment program. >> so their vote today is essentially a vote to move forward in the process of potentially voting on the bill? but you're expecting that that means it's just going to mean more obstruction and no guaranteed even up or down vote? >> yes, this sounds so absurd across america, but today the vote was to close debate on whether to debate and forcing us to take an intervening day
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before we actually vote on closing debate and only then later in the week will we actually start debating the bill. at that point, mcconnell says he'll put forward a proposal and probably have to do with dismantling parts of the affordable care act to try to actually pass this through the senate. so we are a very, very long way from having a senate proposal go forward and i hope citizens across the country can weigh in heavily about how outrageous it is to shut down this bush era bipartisan program that's carefully calibrated to increase the number of unemployment weeks during periods of high unemployment state-by-state. very carefully calculated. it should absolutely go forward, but we're not close to getting it done. >> in terms of your reference to it as a bush-era program. as far as i understand it, as long as this program has been in existence, when it has been voted on outside of big budget deals, when it's been voted on as a standalone thing, there's never before been conditions, paid for conditions attach to
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bills like this, has there? this hasn't been the way this has been dealt with in the past. >> not in all cases, but primarily it's been an understanding this does not need a pay for, and for good reason. these are funds that go to families that keep a financial bridge to the next job during periods of high unemployment and the funds they spend in the community help the economy recover, reduce the unemployment rate which then in turn retires this program. so it's self-retiring. and to force to take money from somewhere else to pay for this has not been in the spirit of the program, has not been the tradition. >> the president has proposed not only extending these unemployment benefits but also a rise in the minimum wage. also things like universal pre-kindergarten, preschool for kids across the country. a bit of a populist agenda in terms of his last state of the union and what he most recently said he's planning to spend the
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whole year on, what we expect to hear from him in his next state of the union in a couple weeks. should we see the democrats party as a whole and democrats in the senate as having that same sort of economically driven agenda right now? are those your priorities? >> absolutely. what we see in this society across america is huge income inequality. you address this all the time. 95% of the new income going to just the 1% at the top. huge differences in wealth. we're losing living wage jobs. out of the great recession, 60% of the jobs we lost were living wage and only 40% of the jobs we're getting back are living wage. families are going from middle class with benefits to near minimum wage part-time jobs, no benefits that you just can't have a good foundation for a family which means you have to have help creating new jobs that are living wage and in the meantime, you need these bridges of unemployment insurance and
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food stamps. and right now, the republican party has been becoming the program basically or the party of the grinch and santa claus putting coal in the stocking for the american families. and so here we have marco rubio trying to reshape the image and we have this memo from the republican party in the house today that basically says, well, members, got to coach you. they had to coach the members how to talk about women's issues. now they're saying we have to coach you on how to be empathetic when we're blocking the programs and so people don't realize how much of a grinch we're being. >> senator jeff merkley. thank you for helping us understand this tonight. stay in touch with this as this continues to wind its way through the senate. it sounds like the debate is going to be feistier than anybody knew. thank you, sir. we'll be right back. hillips' fiber good gummies. they're fruity delicious! just two gummies have 4 grams of fiber! to help support regularity!
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you stand behind what you say. there's a saying around here, around here you don't make excuses. you make commitments. and when you can't live up to them, you own up, and make it right. some people think the kind of accountability that thrives on so many streets in this country has gone missing in the places where it's needed most. but i know you'll still find it when you know where to look.
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in four days, terry mcauliffe will be the new governor of virginia. he's a democrat. he's going to be taking over the governorship from governor ultrasound, from republican governor bob mcdonnell, marked not only with an ethics and corruption scandal but also with a really aggressively conservative policy agenda. since he has been governor-elect, terry mcauliffe promised he would move to expand medicaid in the state which governor mcdonnell rejected. governor-elect mcauliffe will find a way to do that even if he has to go around the legislature
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to do if it. he promised to roll back governor mcdonnell's law that forces virginia women to have medically unnecessary ultrasound exams if they wan to get an abortion in the state. governor-elect mcauliffe promised to reform the state's lax ethics laws which governor ultrasound repeatedly blamed for his own scandal involving a virginia businessman, more than $100,000 in cash and gifts from that businessman and also sort of inexplicably a white ferrari. today the top republican and top democrat in the virginia state assembly co-wrote an editorial in the "richmond times dispatch" explaining the two parties reached a bipartisan agreement on reforming the state's gift laws. so a problem like bob mcdonnell can never happen again. terry mcauliffe for his part says if the legislature passes such a law, he will sign it and also says even if they don't pass such a law, he will make the same change by executive
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order. terry mcauliffe hasn't taken office yet in virginia but already deep into it on the policy changes that he wants, cleaning up from the bob mcdonnell mess, the flat-out reversals wants. his plans to try to go outside the legislature to get what he wants if he can't get it through the legislature. the swearing in is not until this weekend and it's already on in virginia, and here's the really fascinating thing. the virginia governorship and lieutenant governorship and the attorney general race and the two u.s. senators from virginia may all have gone to the democrats now. every single statewide office in virginia may now be held by a democrat. but the virginia legislature is still very republican. the house of delegates is really quite extremely republican as you can see here. but the senate has been under republican control, but sort of under a different story. and it is a story that is in part potentially being rewritten tonight. see, heading into the elections in november, the senate in virginia was an even split. 50/50 democrats and republicans.
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the tie breaking vote in the senate is the lieutenant governor. of course, the lieutenant governor under bob mcdonnell had been republican. that meant effectively republican control of the evenly split senate. 50/50 plus 1 republican in the form of the lieutenant governor. while democrats ran the table in the november election, one of the things they won was the lieutenant governorship. so on paper, that means the 50/50 senate swings to democratic control, too. you think. but the guy who the democrats ran for lieutenant governor, this guy, ralph northam, he, himself, was a state senator which means his seat opened up. in order for the republicans to have any hope of rolling the senate, the democrats need to hold on to his seat in the special election to replace him. and that special election to replace him was held today and tonight in virginia. it was already expected to be a low turnout affair because it's a special election in the middle
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of january. it was already expected to be low turnout and that was before virginia got polar vortexed along with the rest of the country. the polls closed at 7:00 tonight. at this hour, look at this race. you can count the number of votes between these guys on your fingers and toes. the republican in the race is wayne coleman. the democrat is lynwood lewis. member of the house of delegates since 2004. this is incredibly close. 97% in. way, way, way too close to call. for a state senate seat, this has been a heated battle on a massively shortened timeframe. the two campaigns combined to spend over $1 million the last two months and way more than what's been spent in the district. it's the republicans trying to hold on to control of the senate as a whole and the democrats are trying to take it from them. we're going to keep you posted as results come in tonight. as it looks right now, this is way too close to call. less than 1%, it's going to be a recount. if the democrats pull this out and win this, they need to hold on to the other senate seat vacated by their candidate who
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won the attorney generals race in november, too. if democrats do that, too, in two weeks, if they hold on to the seat tonight and hold on to that other vacant seat in two weeks, then the democrats will control the virginia senate. it will be 50/50 and the democrats will have the tie breaking vote with the lieutenant governor and means terry mcauliffe's life will get easier as the state's new governor if the democrats can do it. they have to win this one tonight and it's so close you can't believe it. amazing stuff. watch this space. how do you sleep like that? you dry up, your cold feels even worse. well, put on a breathe right strip and shut your mouth. cold medicines open your nose over time, but add a breathe right strip, and pow! it instantly opens your nose up to 38% more so you can breathe and do the one thing you want to do. sleep. add breathe right to your cold medicine. shut your mouth and sleep right. breathe right.
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there is a job opening now that paid the last person who held it well north than $100,000 a year. the job requires almost no real work, almost don't have to do anything. you can show up if you want, but there's nothing for you to do. the catch with this job is you have to move to tallahassee, florida, and have to spend a lot of time with governor rick scott. turns out that is the hardest job in american government to fill. that whole amazing story is coming up. stay with us. i'm beth... and i'm michelle. and we own the paper cottage. it's a stationery and gifts store. anything we purchase for the paper cottage goes on our ink card. so you can manage your business expenses and access them online instantly with the game changing app from ink.
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about drone strikes, both here at home and abroad, understandably centers on reports of civilian casualties. there's a wide gap between u.s. assessments of such casualties and nongovernmental reports. nevertheless, it is a hard fact that u.s. strikes have resulted in civilian casualties. a risk that exists in every war. and for the families of those civilians, no words or legal construct can justify their loss. for me, and those in my chain of command, those deaths will haunt us for as long as we live. >> president obama speaking last spring. those deaths will haunt us as long as we live. before that speech, there had been no acknowledgement by a president, ever, of the drone program. everybody knows it existed. people regularly reported on
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drone strikes, but there had been almost no public acknowledgement of it. certainly not at the level of the president. until that day last spring when president obama defended the program but also addressed its downfall. he promised greater transparency, promised more oversight. he promised, interestingly, to shift responsibility for the program away from the cia and toward the military instead so we can at least understand the chain of command for this kind of shadow war. tonight, we are learning exclusively about a move on this issue in washington. and in order to bring you that news, i have to warn you that the video you're about to see is not from washington, and it is graphic. this happened last month. a drone strike in yemen targeting a suspected al qaeda terrorist. a man suspected of orchestrating the plot that led to the shutdown of the u.s. embassy in yemen in august. that drone strike reportedly hit civilians who were in a convoy on their way to a wedding. this footage of the aftermath was posted on "the new york times'" lead blog. this exclusive video shown here, this footage was taken by yemeni
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journalist and given to nbc news by the human rights group, reprieve. as you can see, it's graphic, shows several casualties of the attack. local villagers say in all 12 civilians were killed and 14 injured. pentagon officials declined to comment on. a yemeni official said the video is consistent with what the yemeni government knows about what happened after the attack but the security agency maintains some militants were killed in the strikes. drone strikes are less frequent than they used to be now. nor are claims or documented reports that drone strikes killed civilians instead of their targets. none of that is new. what is new here, what we're learning tonight is this. usual officials have told nbc news national investigative correspondent michael isikoff they launched an internal investigation into this strike
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that we just showed you that footage from. that is news. it seems like it could be important news. watch this from michael isikoff. >> drones have become america's weapon of choice against terrorists enclaves overseas. this exclusive video showing bodies of victims of a pentagon drone strike on the 12th was taken by a yemeni journalist and given to nbc news by reprieve, a rights group. u.s. in yemeni officials say the strike which killed is and injured 14 was aiming for shawqui al badani, a plot that led to the shutdown of u.s. embassies last august. the victims were in a convoy that was part of a wedding procession. "yes, for sure, it was a wedding" this villager says. yemeni sources say badani was wounded and escaped. u.s. officials decline comment on who was killed in a rare acknowledgement, they tell nbc news they have launched an internal investigation into the
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strike. >> an internal investigation into the strike in yemen launched internally meaning inside the obama administration. that is not the kind of news, not the kind of review we are used to hearing about after reports like this. nbc's michael isikoff is live with us for more. mike, u.s. officials telling you they have launched an internal investigation into this. is this a rare development? it seems rare to me. >> it is. first of all, the whole story is the reminder while the rest of the mideast appears to be blowing up, we're still actively fighting a very aggressive drone war in yemen that's killing people and if our reporting is correct, making lots of enemies. while president obama did acknowledge that civilians have been killed by u.s. drone strikes in that speech last may which you showed, it is extremely rare for the u.s. government to comment about any particular drone strike, much less acknowledge it is investigating whether or not
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that strike killed civilians. but that's what happened here. couple of factors. first, we showed this video to the administration. and it was after that that they made this acknowledgement that they are launching this investigation. but also, the yemeni government while it officially claims that those were militants that were killed, those scorched bodies that you see in that video. it also sent representatives to that village right after that attack to offer compensation to the tribe. cash and rifles. and that seemed to be a pretty big concession that something may have gone awry here. i spoke to a yemeni official about this who says, look, this whole thing is a mess, we're not sure who was killed. it is -- this should be a reminder we need more openness and transparency about what is going on in the drone strikes. >> on that issue, part of what has been so singular about covering this war, this in effect shadow war with the drone
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strikes is there really isn't a lot of independent journalism available in the places where these drone strikes happen. in this case, thanks to this group that's critical of u.s. policy reprieve, for making this footage from local sources available, you do have this documentation. do you think that this documentation, which, again, is a very rare thing, is what has caused the administration to take this unusual step of making the review? i mean, is it because there isn't film like this of other drone strikes that they haven't had reviews of other strikes before this? >> look, it is very hard to say, and i wouldn't say that they haven't had reviews. they would tell you they have. in fact, the official statement from the white house is whenever we have reports of civilian casualties, we investigate thoroughly. but then getting from there, that general statement, to a particular strike, which strikes have killed civilians? how many civilians does the u.s. government believe have been
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killed in these strikes is something we've never gotten an answer to. it's something human rights groups have been calling for. some of them met with senior administration officials today to press on this very issue including about this strike. so there are still a lot of unanswered questions here. in our package, which is now on nbcnews.com, you can watch a former obama administration official says, look, this video doesn't prove the case one way or another, whether those are civilians or militants but it does say -- but it does demand and suggest that we need more transparency, the transparency that was promised last may, we still don't have. >> michael isikoff, nbc news investigative correspondent. michael, thank you for helping us understand this. congratulations on the stoop. it is a dark story, but a really interesting political development. thanks a lot. >> thank you, rachel. >> all right. we'll be right back. to tools and cleaning products... to state of the art computers, to coffee to keep you fueled. from the sign over the door to the boxes to get it out the door. yes, staples has everything you need to launch your big idea.
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hey, good news update. last night we told you about the icebreaker food chain succession of stuck ships in the antarctic. it started with a russian research ship getting stuck in icy antarctic waters on christmas morning. scientists stuck onboard. they got rescued by two ice breakers, one giant chinese one called the "snow dragon" and an australia icebreaker. after saving the little russian ship's passengers and putting them on one boat, getting out of their way, the "snow dragon" got stuck, the chinese ship got stuck and the australian one was close to getting stuck again as well.
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america's one and only heavy icebreaking ship, the mighty "polar star" was dispatched to go rescue the rescue party. hold tight, stay warm, help is on the way. we'll be there on thursday. that was the status as of last night. now there's new news. tonight we can gladly report the polar star has received the order to stand down. and that's because the stuck originally stuck little russian ship have become unstuck. both vessels are reportedly now free from the antarctic ice, thanks to a favorable change in wind conditions, a large crack thankfully formed in the ice and the chinese ship at least is now navigating out into the open water and no longer needs rescuing. so yes, wherever you live, it is cold and icy right now. but you do not need america's most massive and powerful heavy ice breaker to come rescue you a and as of tonight, neither do the chinese. tada!
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to prove to you that aleve is the better choice for him, he's agreed to give it up. that's today? [ male announcer ] we'll be with him all day as he goes back to taking tylenol. i was okay, but after lunch my knee started to hurt again. and now i've got to take more pills. ♪ yup. another pill stop. can i get my aleve back yet? ♪
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for my pain, i want my aleve. ♪ [ male announcer ] look for the easy-open red arthritis cap. in march, jennifer care reel resigned in a scandal for a supposedly charity for veterans and internet gamble cafes enormous amounts of cash that were going to lots of places but not to veterans. her p.r. firm promoted that charity and when the scandal broke, she resigned last march. that same week, rick scott shut down the office of florida lieutenant governor. she's gone, he got the files packed up, sent the workers home, turned off the lights.
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that office has been empty ever since. now, by way of the constitution, there is supposed to be a lieutenant governor for the state of florida. somebody who's ready to take over if governor quits or cannot the florida constitution says the governor has to pick somebody for that job. upon vacancy in the office of the lieutenant governor, the governor shall appoint a successor, rick scott. so here we are coming up on a year and florida still does not have a new one. and so lawsuit. the florida democratic activists who filed this lawsuit today against rick scott told reporters, i think it's time he's done his job. it's been nine months. a woman could have conceived and delivered a baby in that time. which is true. now here's where it gets really interesting. because as slow as rick scott might seem to have been about picking a replacement, rick scott has, in fact, tried to appoint people to fill that office. he has tried. first he tried a county school
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superintendent turned him down. said no. so zo then he tried a county sheriff. but the county sheriff also turned him down and said no. then he floated the name of a state senator who didn't exactly say no but who did make it very clear that he's quite open to taking a whole different job that's not being rick scott's lieutenant governor. tampa tribute saying neither that state senator or a fourth person would answer when asked directly if they would be willing to become florida's number two elected official. so part of the problem may be rick scott. it's not like -- i don't know. it's not exactly like not being of like not being able to get a date. he's very unpopular in the state and maybe no one wants to be seen as the side kick to the unpopular guy. that said, the job does have a $125,000 salary so they really ought to be able to find somebody no matter how much everybody dislikes it. governor scott is up for re-election in the state of
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november. he does appear to be trailing. picking a new lieutenant governor, it doesn't have much upside for him, right? picking the new person for this one largely ceremonial office, it's almost inherently risky for rick scott. whoever he decides on when he find somebody who will say yes, he's then going to spend a big part of his re-election campaign year trying to vet that person and then defending this flu office holder who by design will do practically nothing once they are in office. and this is kind of the curse of the lieutenant governor. what do you do if you're a lieutenant governor, i mean, it is the number one characteristic of being number two that you can add next to nothing. you can be a liability if you screw up. you have basically nothing to contribute to the administration because you have no can embarrass the boss if things go south. and the curse of the lieutenant governor actually seems to be kind of a national curse right now. it isn't just florida's lieutenant governor who quit and apparently can't be replaced, even under the threat of
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lawsuit. also there's issues in nebraska. nebraska's republican lieutenant governor quit in february over certain phone calls made on his official state cell phone to women who were not his wife. the massachusetts rat democratic lieutenant governor quit in june after crashing his official state car while reportedly driving 108 miles an hour. then today, in arkansas, today, the lieutenant governor of arkansas refused calls for his resignation over alleged ethics violations. those calls for his resignation coming in part from the governor of arkansas. and now his own republican party is talking about impeaching him if he refuses to resign. lieutenant governors are almost their own existential problem. one after the other. i mean, here we have the lieutenant governor of texas doing his best to get a relative out of jail. and doing it on tape. >> i want to talk to the most senior police officer you have where you are right now. my name is david dewhurst. i'm the lieutenant governor of the state of texas. you incarcerated my
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sister-in-law. >> that's the number two guy in texas. this is the number two in wisconsin. she's amazing. >> hi, rebecca clayfish here. i'm out in the global warming today poisoning the world with my breath. >> i don't know what it is about that's the lieutenant governor from wisconsin. and god bless south carolina, where the last lieutenant governor to stick around was a guy who compared people who received public assistance to stray animals. his name was andre bower. he the next lieutenant governor in south carolina serve for a year then quit in a financial scandal. that guy got replaced by the state senator who you see in the middle here, masquerading as a federal general with slaves. he announced that he won't run for re-election. instead he will apply for the job of president at the college of charleston. he said he had been forced by providence and the south carolina constitution to become lieutenant governor but he never had any desire to have the job. because who would want a job like that?
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and from the perspective of florida governor rick scott, why would you ever want to pick a new person for that job, even if you could finally get somebody, anybody to say yes. but the lawsuit wants to force mr. scott to name somebody, anybody as lieutenant governor within 30 days. the question is, can he do it? can you do it, governor? can you find somebody to say yes? it's time for "the last word with lawrence o'donnell." have a great night. harry reid actually got 60 votes in the united states senate today, including six republican. but they were not votes to pass a bill. they were simply votes to do what the senate knows how to do best. talk about maybe someday passing a bill. lett